100,000 Killed In Canada By Policy | MAID = A Systemic Failure Dressed Up As Compassion
A false dichotomy: framing MAiD as “choice” while failing to guarantee supports that would make life genuinely liveable
The Daily News | The Art of Liberty Foundation | Etienne de la Boetie
Kelsi Sheren | kelsisheren.substack.com
Canada is about to kill its 100,000th citizen through Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) this spring.
Not in a war. Not on a battlefield. Not in a medical accident. Killed by policy, by a government that wants you dead.
Let’s say this by name, call it the truth. A systemic failure dressed up as compassion.
MAiD was sold as a narrow option for the terminally ill, a rare mercy. That fiction collapsed long ago. Today, assisted death is a routine outcome for people struggling with disability, isolation, poverty, and mental health challenges and when the world looked at what we’re doing, it didn’t nod approvingly. It recoiled.
The United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities didn’t mince words: Canada must repeal “Track 2” MAiD, the legal pathway that allows people whose deaths are not reasonably foreseeable to receive assisted dying. It called Track 2 “extremely concerning.” It said the law rests on “negative, ableist perceptions of the quality and value of the life of persons with disabilities,” suggesting it assumes suffering is inherent to disability rather than a product of social inequality and discrimination.
This is not fluff from ivory-tower bureaucrats. This is the authoritative UN body charged with monitoring Canada’s compliance with the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, a treaty Canada ratified in 2010.
The committee didn’t just express concern. It recommended sweeping corrective action:
“To ensure the right to life for persons with disabilities,” the UN wrote, Canada must repeal Track 2 MAiD … including the 2027 expansion to persons whose sole underlying medical condition is mental illness.”
It also urged Canada not to support proposals for MAiD access for mature minors and not to allow advance requests, and called on the government to address systemic failures from poverty and housing insecurity to lack of accessible healthcare and community supports.
Yet here’s the sting, Canada’s government did not appeal the legal ruling that opened the door to Track 2 MAiD. That ruling didn’t just broaden eligibility it fundamentally changed the premise of assisted dying, assuming disability itself justifies eligibility rather than focusing on end-of-life conditions.
The UN committee described this shift not as careful reform, but as a false dichotomy: framing MAiD as “choice” while failing to guarantee supports that would make life genuinely liveable.
Another telling moment came when Rosemary Kayess, Vice-Chair of the disability rights committee, asked Canadian representatives in Geneva: “How is Track 2 MAiD not state-sponsored euthanasia?” and questioned how Canada could not see Track 2 as a regression a potential step back into eugenics.
That question hits at the core of this crisis, when a government offers death more readily than dignity. When it normalizes assisted death while under-resourcing the basic conditions that make life worth living. When suffering born of neglect becomes a ticket to the morgue.
That’s not autonomy. That’s abandonment with consent forms.
The UN didn’t offer mild suggestions. It called for repeal. For suppression of expansion. For a pivot toward real supports housing, accessible healthcare, community mental health resources, economic inclusion, and genuine equality before the law.
Instead of acting, Canada has allowed MAiD expansion to continue with mental illness alone slated to become eligible in 2027. That expansion was specifically flagged by the UN as part of what must be undone.
Let that sink in for a second, because it’s as crazy as it sounds.A global human-rights body says Canada is violating the right to life of people with disabilities by allowing them access to assisted death when they are not terminally ill and the government still pushes forward.
That’s not leadership. That’s denial. Thats murder.
The worst part is were not just failing the vulnerable, we’re selling their death as some form of progress. Canada’s MAiD system is rapidly approaching a body count that would make it one of the nation’s leading causes of death and yet we still frame it as humane.
The UN committee flagged exactly why this matters: without addressing systemic barriers — poverty, inaccessible healthcare, lack of community supports — offering assisted death is not a safeguard. It’s a band-aid on a bullet wound.
When the world watches and says “stop,” we should listen.
When a treaty we ratified tells us our policy undermines basic human rights, we should act.
But Canada did not.
There is a difference between letting people choose death and engineering a social environment where death becomes the most accessible option and that difference matters.
History will not judge Canada by how cleanly it ended lives, but by whether it had courage enough to reverse course when the world told it to.
One hundred thousand deaths is not a milestone. It’s a warning light flashing red.
And we are driving straight toward it.
Source + Continue Reading: https://kelsisheren.substack.com/p/100000-dead-canada-ignored-the-world?utm_source=substack&utm_campaign=post_embed&utm_medium=email
Image Source: [Truth11.com Meme]
Original Article: https://dailynewsfromaolf.substack.com/p/100000-dead-canada-ignored-the-world

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